In a decisive rebuke to decades of occupation, the UN General Assembly adopted two major resolutions demanding Israel’s full withdrawal from all Arab lands seized in 1967, including the Palestinian territories and the Syrian Golan. The overwhelming support highlighted Israel’s growing international isolation, despite continued diplomatic protection from a handful of Western states.
The first resolution, passed by 151 votes to 11, reaffirmed that Palestine’s freedom is a legal obligation, not a political concession. It called for a “peaceful settlement of the question of Palestine” and urged renewed efforts toward final-status talks, while clearly stating that Israel must dismantle settlements, evacuate settlers, and end its unlawful presence across the occupied Palestinian territory.
The text condemned Israel’s demographic and territorial engineering in Gaza, long viewed as an attempt to permanently fragment Palestinian land. It stressed that Gaza must be reunited with the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority and reaffirmed the Palestinian right to self-determination, including a just resolution for refugees displaced since 1948.
A second resolution, adopted by 123 votes to 7, targeted Israel’s annexation of the Syrian Golan Heights. It declared Israel’s 1981 move to impose its laws on the territory “null and void” and demanded its immediate reversal, underscoring that occupation and settlement activity cannot erase Syria’s sovereignty.
The Assembly further pressed Israel to resume negotiations on the Syrian and Lebanese tracks, emphasizing that any comprehensive regional settlement requires withdrawal to the 4 June 1967 line. Anything less, it warned, would only cement a status quo built on continued dispossession.
Yet despite the clarity of international law, Israel continues to operate with near-total impunity under the protection of its allies. Whether these resolutions lead to actual enforcement remains uncertain, but they reaffirm the global refusal to legitimize ongoing occupation and the systematic denial of Palestinian and Syrian rights.
